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MACRO - Gravity and Other Myths
Opening event of the Adelaide
Festival 2022. Adelaide Oval. March 5 2022. Gravity and Other Myths in
association with the Adelaide Festival and featuring Djuka Mali, First Nation
Performers, Christie Anderson and the Adelaide Young Voices.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
The forecast rain held off for
the Adelaide Festival’s spectacular opening event under a cloudy starry sky at
the Adelaide Oval. Seven thousand people sat on chairs on the grass before a
large stage with huge screens. A complex lighting rig dominated the stage and
lights were set around the edge of the seated areas to capture the choreography of indigenous
dance troupe Djuka Mali and the members of Gravity and Other Myths. After a
moving and powerful Welcome to Kuarna country, the stage burst into life with
the energy and vitality of the First Nation dancers from the Northern
Territory. A male and female singer filled the air with their vocals and the
celtic rhythms of the Scottish highlands echoed through the night in a salute
to the 70th anniversary of the Edinburgh Festival which this year
will include Adelaide’s very own dynamic physical theatre troupe, the daring
and remarkable Gravity and Other Myths in their performance of Macro for this
year’s opening event of the 22 Adelaide Festival
Co-Artistic Director of th
festival, Neil Armfield AO opened the evening’s celebration indicating that
this would be a streamed event to the state’s regions and in a tribute to
legendary spin bowler Shane Warne who had just died, Armfield asked the crowd
to observe a minute’s silence in honour of Warnie’s gift to cricket and his
nation.
Moving through the audience, the
young performers of Gravity and Other Myth’s ascended to the stage to the
magnificent, soaring and uplifting choral sounds of the Young Adelaide Voices of Aurora
conducted by Christie Anderson and to the accompanied voices of the two
singers. I have no programme sadly and cannot acknowledge the spine thrilling
contribution that they made to the evening spectacle, but singers, dancers and
athletic performers gave the evening a dynamism befitting an opening event.
Unfortunately much of the real
impact of this collaboration of song, dance and gymnastic wonderment was lost
as a result of seating on the flat, indistinct and dark lighting and performances that might have thrilled and
amazed in a theatre were diffused by the lack of attention to the need to shape
the performance for such an outside event on a relatively cool nd cloudy
Adelaide Autumn evening.
Phoo by Darcy Grant |
Absolutely phenomenal! There is no other word to describe
the exhilaration and sheer awe and amazement inspired by The Pulse. In a remarkable
collaboration of talent and skill and body and voice, Gravity and Other Myths
with the Young Adelaide Voices of Christie Anderson’s Aurora have redefined the
art of acrobatics, not just as a display of balance and tumbling but as a
well-spring of the human spirit, soaring to the heights of their art form and
transporting the audience into a magical
realm of wonder and amazement. Because
of Lockdown and the inability of the three core ensembles of Gravity and Other
Myths to undertake their international tours, the company of young performers
combined with the thrilling Aurora singers to present a performance to blow the
mind and scale the very heights of athleticism and gymnastic artistry.
This
evening’s performance has not altered my judgement of this phenomenal young
troupe. However the opening event is a lesson in knowing your space. People
seated directly in front of the stage and quite close were naturally blown away
by the performance. Those who found it difficult to se beyond the heads in
front of them or from the side could only share the experience through the two
screens. However, an outside event can not be lit as though it is taking place
in a theatre and as a result the screens were too dark and as a streamed event
it would make little impact on the viewers in the state’s country regions.
In
concept, the Opening event was an excellent free gift to the 7000 who were
fortunate enough to secure tickets. For the visitor from the Gold Coast who sat
next to me, the patterned striding across the stage between acts was too
repetitive and he kept asking me “Who are they” “I can’t see the stage” He left
to meet someone just before the fireworks and would have missed the climactic
display of colour and sound. He would have enjoyed a much shorter event and
perhaps he will return next year when many of the problems will have been
sorted out.
The
issues that need to be resolved do not detract from the superb talents of all
performers and the gift of Welcome to country, which is always moving in its
generosity and spiritual sharing of the land and its First Nation People. It in
no way diminishes the sheet joi d’vivre and life force of the Djuka Mali
dancers or the captivating, soaring and luring voices of the singers and
unending choral sound and numbering of the Adelaide Voices. With more effective
lighting and a raised stage spectators on the Adelaide Oval and viewers as far
afield as Port Augusta and Naracoorte would have been vowed by an event that
could have fulfilled its promise.